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Hi oibaf,
no the last version, at least the one available yesterday, crash my box (Xubuntu 12.04); the panel of Xfce was missing, the cursor was missing and the desktop was strangely "opaque"; I've purged your PPA and reverted intel driver with Ubuntu repos; at the moment I've installed these drivers https://launchpad.net/~glasen/+archive/intel-driver in order to be able to use SNA features (anyway even those works only with "export LIBGL_ALWAYS_SOFTWARE=1" entry in .bashrc on my box)

when you use Ubuntu to select the gallium/non-gallium drivers as default? I prefer to compile a snapshot on my own, but basically a nice idea. How do you build the 32 bit mesa libs for a 64 bit system? Since llvm is forced i could not build em...

Hi oibaf,
no the last version, at least the one available yesterday, crash my box (Xubuntu 12.04); the panel of Xfce was missing, the cursor was missing and the desktop was strangely "opaque"; I've purged your PPA and reverted intel driver with Ubuntu repos; at the moment I've installed these drivers https://launchpad.net/~glasen/+archive/intel-driver in order to be able to use SNA features (anyway even those works only with "export LIBGL_ALWAYS_SOFTWARE=1" entry in .bashrc on my box)

thx

It may be a regression, hopefully already fixed upstream. However currently mesa can't properly build, so you'll have to wait to see if it's fixed.

Intel drivers

I just installed your ppa on my Ubuntu 12.10 which is installed on ASUS K53E laptop that comes with 2nd gen i5 and Intel HD3000 video. Earlier on I had the stock drivers and had SNA enabled via xorg. I updated to your driver via PPA and before that I removed the xorg so as not to cause any conflict. However after upgrading and rebooting, I noticed that SNA was not activated and I had to resort to creating the xorg to get SNA enabled. While this is fine, the xorg ppa intel drivers don't seem to need the xorg hack as they come with SNA enabled by default.

I just installed your ppa on my Ubuntu 12.10 which is installed on ASUS K53E laptop that comes with 2nd gen i5 and Intel HD3000 video. Earlier on I had the stock drivers and had SNA enabled via xorg. I updated to your driver via PPA and before that I removed the xorg so as not to cause any conflict. However after upgrading and rebooting, I noticed that SNA was not activated and I had to resort to creating the xorg to get SNA enabled. While this is fine, the xorg ppa intel drivers don't seem to need the xorg hack as they come with SNA enabled by default.